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Strengthening livelihoods

 

The term livelihood is currently fashionable in development rhetoric as a means of gaining some understanding about the complexity of poverty. The livelihood concept encompasses a persons' whole life; not just the obvious things - food, income or work activities - but also less tangible things such as people's access to various resources, their skills and ideas, their standing within the community or the power they have to influence decision making. Essentially, people's capacity to make a sustainable living, their vulnerability and their resilience to negative change is shaped by the choices they are able to make based on their access to essential resources.

 

Bees for Development believe that apiculture is a feasible way to help people work their way out of poverty while at the same time maintaining natural diversity. Honeybees are valued for honey and beeswax production to generate income and medicines. Beekeeping gives some of the world's poorest people the opportunity to harvest commodities of international quality and value. Issues currently facing our world include poverty, climate change, deforestation, loss of biodiversity, water shortages, pollution and urban sprawl and these often have the greatest negative impact on the most vulnerable people. While beekeeping cannot cure these problems, it offers an environmentally beneficial activity that helps people to fight against them.  Apiculture and strong beekeeping associations can help to protect fragile environments, especially forest habitats so important for soil and watershed protection.

 

The honey bees' most important economic and ecological function, their pollination activity, is often overlooked, misunderstood or taken for granted. Lack of bees is frequently an important reason for low harvest yields. In many areas of the world, bee populations (of all types) are declining due to habitat destruction, parasites, diseases, climate change and unsustainable methods of honey hunting and beekeeping. A well planned beekeeping project can help to mitigate many of these problems.

 

However, the danger inherent in beekeeping projects is to underestimate the risks and complexity of beekeeping and basing investment on unrealistic expectations or inaccurate assumptions or to fail to value essential practical skills and knowledge. This leads to disappointment and loss of trust. Beekeeping project design needs to be based on a holistic understanding of people's livelihoods, the environmental requirements of the bees and the technical demands of the beekeeping activities to be implemented. The close links of beekeeping with the spiritual life in many cultures indicates humans have had a very long relationship with honeybees. Where people are most successful in beekeeping they often have a great depth of indigenous knowledge and a sincere respect, interest and love for the bees.

 

 

 

List of Articles available on this topic (44):


Title

Author

A plain language guide to the National Beekeeping Programme of Tanzania

Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism

African honey trade workshop (no.81)

Bees for Development

Apiculture and poverty alleviation in Cameroon

Fombad, E. E. & Nuesiri, E.O.

Assessing the Contribution of Organic Agriculture for Increasing Livelihood Security in Uganda

M Hauser, C Walaga

Bee product diversification and value addition

Bees for Development

Beekeeping and sustainable livelihoods (in Strengthening livelihoods)

Bradbear, N

Beekeeping development using value chain approach in Fogera district

Gebey, T.; Berhe, K.; Hoekstra D.

Beekeeping Development:Honey for the Hajj: Afganistan

Davey, Christopher

Beekeeping for income generation and coastal forest conservation in Tanzania

Lalika, M.C.S. & Machangu, J.S.

Beekeeping for income generation and costal forest conservation

Lalika, M.C.S. & Machangu, J.S.

Beekeeping in Rural Development

Njiro Wildlife Research Centre

Beekeeping in the enclave of Cabinda, Angola

Emery, N.

Beekeeping: a livelihood strategy in pastoral and agro-pastoral dry land areas of Southern Oromia and Somali regional states, Ethiopia

Debissa, Lemessa

Bees and rural livelihoods

Bradbear, N.

Bees and their role in forest livelihoods: a guide to the services provided by bees and the sustainable harvesting, processing and marketing of their products

Bradbear, N.

Burma Beekeeping News 1988

Development of beekeeping in Laos - various strategic choices

Sengngam, B. & Vandame, J.

Economic returns from beekeeping

Bees for Development

Eighteenth Annual Report 2011 - 2012

Keystone

Fifth Caribbean Beekeeping Congress in Guyana

Giving Back to the Bees: Volunteer for Projects Close to Your Heart Part 2 of 2

McNeil MEA

Governing Forest Commons in the Congo Basin: Non-Timber Forest Product Value Chains

Ingram, V.

Guiding Hope Business Award Press Release

Guiding Hope

Haiti Beekeeping Project

Sterk, B.

Honeybees in Mountain Agriculture

Partap, U.

innovations in revival strategies for declining pollinators with particular reference to the indigenous honey bees

Partap, U.

Malawi success stories

Gregory, P. & Ngalonde, W.

Moroccan Beekeeping Project

Dr Paul Schweitzer and others

New Low-Cost Soil and Cement Products (incl Hives)

A.A.U.

North Western Bee Products Operations Handbook

Wainwright, D.

One hectare of land gives 1,000,000 Indian Rupees per annum

Jamwal, N.

Overseas Aid: Afghanistan

Policy and Processes that Enable Honey Export

Sharma, HK; Partap, U; Gurung, Min B

Proceedings of the Biodiversity and Livelihoods Conference

Dutt,R; Seeley,J; Roy,P (eds)

Restoration of Apis cerana japonica on the Goto Islands

Hishahi, F.

Science for Self Reliance

Society for Technology & Development

Small-scale woodland-based enterprises with outstanding economic potential: the case of honey in Zambia

Mickels-Kokwe, G.

Southern Sudan: Beekeepers survey report

Mogga, J

Starting with Bees: An Introduction to African Beekeeping

Nazzi, F., Annoscia, D., Del Fabbro, S., Del Piccolo, F.

Sweet, sticky and sustainable social business

Ingram, V. and Njikeu, J.

Sweetening Livlihoods

Underdown, D.

The potential of the beekeeping industry in enhancing rural household incomes in Botswana

Lepetu, J.P. Thelo, O. and Sebina, N.V.

Top-Bar Hive Beekeeping: Wisdom and Pleasure Combined

Mangum, W.A.

Understanding Mountain Poverty in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas

Hunzai, K; Gerlitz, J-Y; Hoermann, B.